End of US highway 165

US 165 has been around since the beginning in 1926. Its south end has always been in the town of Iowa, Louisiana, although originally traffic came in from the north along Thompson Avenue (which is now LA hwy. 383). As shown on this map, after passing through Iowa, US 165 ended at its junction with US 90:

Karners, Jan. 2015

​The current US 165 roadway was built in 1937; the last southbound marker is just past I-10 and LA 3258:

Karners, Jan. 2015

The junction with US 90 is just east of town. No "End" sign was posted there:

Allen, 2000

Karners, Dec. 2009 (unchanged as of 2015)

US 165 ends at a "Y" intersection with US 90, which is just visible running across the background of those last photos. The interchange with I-10 is about a mile behind the camera. These shots show the signs on US 90 at the south beginning of US 165 (from both eastbound and westbound, respectively):

Karners, Jan. 2015

Allen, 2000

Karners, Jan. 2015

​For drivers who make that turn to the north, the first confirming assembly looks like this...

Karners, Dec. 2009

...but that was posted on the east branch of the "Y", so traffic coming from eastbound US 90 (and therefore using the west branch of the "Y") never sees that sign. The next reference to US 165 is about a mile ahead, just shy of the I-10 interchange:

Karners, Jan. 2015

Originally the north end of US 165 was at its junction with US 65 in McGehee, although today's US 65 across the north and east edges of town had not yet been built. Instead, US 65 went through the business district on 1st Street, and then left town via what is now AR hwy. 4, or Crooked Bayou Drive:

c. 1930, AHTD

​The photo was looking west on AR 4 -- originally that was northbound US 65, which continued straight ahead. US 278 did not exist at the time, nor did modern US 65-165 to the right. But to the left was the north beginning of US 165. (Actually, traffic used what is now Owl Street, which is situated a few yards east of the modern highway.)

Google Maps Street View, June 2008

That lasted until 1938, when modern US 65 was built. That partially followed what had been US 165, so the US 165 designation was truncated to a junction about four miles south of McGehee, or about three miles northeast of Dermott:

c. 1940, AHTD

This photo shows modern signage at that intersection -- today US 165 continues north with US 65, but until 1982 it ended here:

Nelson, Jan. 2006

​In this photo we are looking south on US 65. Formerly the north beginning of US 165 was to the right:

Nelson, Jan. 2006

In more recent times, Arkansas has applied for and received several of what could be considered frivolous US highway extensions... and US 165 is one of them. In 1982, US 165 was extended north through McGehee to Dumas, via a 24-mile overlap with US 65. From there, US 165 splits off again, runs through DeWitt, Stuttgart, and England, and then to its current terminus at US 70 in North Little Rock:

Karners, Apr. 2014 (posted after 2008)

Westbound US 70 comes in from the right and then continues ahead. This photo shows the signage from that perspective (west on US 70, or Broadway):

Nelson, Oct. 2003

US 165 begins to the left on Baucum Pike. This perspective was looking the opposite direction: east on US 70, which curves to the left here. Heading off into the distance is Baucum Pike and the north beginning of US 165:

Backlin, Jan. 2008

Backlin, Jan. 2008

Travelers who take that fork to the right will soon encounter the first southbound US 165 marker: